Originally posted by Essan
Radiation does not colour rain. Other substances - like soot or dust or pollen can. Whether those substances are radioactive is another matter. But
the colour of rain does not in any possible way indicate radioactivity.

Radiation won't colour rain, but the source of the radiation may.
There's been a lot of uranium and plutonium going up in smoke at Fukushima.

Originally posted by Essan
Radiation does not colour rain. Other substances - like soot or dust or pollen can. Whether those substances are radioactive is another matter. But
the colour of rain does not in any possible way indicate radioactivity.

Radiation won't colour rain, but the source of the radiation may.
There's been a lot of uranium and plutonium going up in smoke at Fukushima.

If the source creates radiation, would not the source be radioactive?

Following that logic, burned uranium and plutonium particulate would colour the rain and be radioactive

Originally posted by JakiusFogg
Even at the height of pollen season in the UK, you never see anything that matches that description.

Consider yourself lucky, then. In the Tokyo area they get it every year. I've seen it several times.

If you watch the news, you'll see a lot of people wearing masks in Tokyo. I've been laughing at the foreign media - reporting the masks as
protection against radiation, or protection against smog. At this time of year, it's all about the cedar pollen. It was an extremely hot summer, so
this year is looking very bad.

Originally posted by Essan
Radiation does not colour rain. Other substances - like soot or dust or pollen can. Whether those substances are radioactive is another matter. But
the colour of rain does not in any possible way indicate radioactivity.

Radiation won't colour rain, but the source of the radiation may.
There's been a lot of uranium and plutonium going up in smoke at Fukushima.

If the source creates radiation, would not the source be radioactive?

Following that logic, burned uranium and plutonium particulate would colour the rain and be radioactive

For all I know the colouration may be from pollen but, watching the black smoke coming from openly burning MOX rods at the Fukushima'd Fukushima
plant and seeing the wind dispersion, I wouldn't want that rain to be falling on me.

It very well could be pollen, it is in season but what is very scary is the "similarities" in the reactions of the governments and events that are
happening afterwards in both Chernobyl and Fukashima/Tokyo. Hopefully there is a lot of independent research going on right now, unattached to the
government in anyway.

Strontium (chemical symbol Sr) is a silvery metal that rapidly turns yellowish in air.
Strontium-90 is also found in waste from nuclear reactors. It is considered one of the more hazardous constituents of nuclear wastes. The accident at
the Chernobyl nuclear power plant also introduced a large amount of Sr-90 into the environment. A large part of the Sr-90 was deposited in the Soviet
Republics. The rest was dispersed as fallout over Northern Europe and worldwide. No significant amount of stronium-90 reached the U.S.

On March 22, 2011 I noticed many yellow puddles on my driveway during the rain.
I took these pictures and also collected a sample. I have noticed in many news articles that people have been reporting yellow rain in Japan, Oregon,
and elsewhere following the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power complex. This has been officially attributed to pollen, not radioactive
fallout. I found this explanation questionable,

And here is footage of the Japanese yellow rain( near the end of the video)

No doubt I live in a state where pollen is so bad my car is yellow every morning I wake up in the Spring. It's so bad that my windshield wipers with
washer fluid have trouble breaking through it sometimes. I have lived here all my life and have seen it so thick you can see it floating down from the
trees. In all my 30 something years I have never once seen yellow rain......

I am sure I will get labelled by the "true believers" in this thread as a paid government informant, however I can also personally verify that it
does in fact rain with a yellow tinge during pollen season in Japan. There's nothing to say that the pollen and water has not been irradiated
however, but the coloured rain by itself is nothing too unusual this time of year in Tokyo.

Originally posted by ADUB77
Anyone who is trying to argue that it isn't uranium in the rain is a paid disinformant or a dillusional disinformant
Not to mention uranium is used to colour glass like a previous poster mentioned

Only problem with your argument is the uranium is not in the air. There is a big difference between radiation and particles of uranium which is very
heavy

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